The Strait of Hormuz currently shows zero maritime traffic, contradicting Iran’s announcement that the passage is “completely open” during the ceasefire. The traffic normalization market for April 30 sits at 12% YES, suggesting traders don’t buy the claim.
Market reaction
Odds for traffic normalization by end of April dropped after the zero-traffic report surfaced. Iran’s Foreign Minister declared the strait open, but the ongoing US Navy blockade of Iranian ports continues to throttle movement. With 12 days left until the April 30 deadline, the gap between Iran’s rhetoric and observable shipping data is priced directly into the contract.
Why it matters
The WTI Crude Oil price market reflects the supply disruption risk, with traders watching the possibility of WTI hitting $160 in April. Zero traffic through the strait, which normally handles roughly 20% of global oil supply, could push oil prices higher as supply concerns grow. That market hasn’t seen substantial activity yet, but the conditions for a move exist.
What to watch
Volume in the Strait of Hormuz traffic market is thin, with no recent trading activity, making it susceptible to sharp moves on minimal capital. The US naval blockade and the contradiction in Iranian claims create a volatile setup. A YES share at 12¢ pays $1 if traffic normalizes by April 30, a 8.33x return.
Watch for Pentagon updates on the naval blockade and announcements from major shipping lines. Any shift in either could move this market fast.
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Related to This Story ▲ Strait of Hormuz traffic remains blocked as ceasefire expiration looms